leebran20
Posts: 84
Joined: 2/18/2004 From: Honolulu, Hawaii Status: offline
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Hey gang: I'm by no means an expert on floats, but I do know they're very collectible and attract some very serious collectors -- from Hawaii, to the U.S. West Coast, Japan and Europe, etc. My digging partner -- who also owns an antique shop -- is very knowledgeable on these and is the trader that one particular Hawaii collector uses to build his collection. I was at my partner's shop this week when he showed me a package that just came in, which he secured for this collector, and in it were just two, very special floats, that totaled nearly 3 grand. One was a heavily embossed specimen w/ characters never seen before, and the other was in a color never seen before. This guy regularly competes with about a handful of others in the world for floats like these -- so both the serious collectors and the serious floats are out there. I prefer to dig and collect bottles, but I do have some floats and on this day at the shop I did happen to spend 80 bucks for two smaller floats (and this was heavily discounted because he's my bud). This is the first time I've bought floats. Both have sea water trapped inside of them -- the smaller one, about 4 inches across, is about a 1/3 full -- and those are the ones that I really like right now. Sam, great story and float. Terrific good fortune, and that's a pretty good one in my semi-knowledgeable capacity, with its sandblasted quality and real dark green color. You rarely find them on Hawaii's beaches these days, but quite a while back they would not infrequently turn up. I did find one at a beach on Oahu's east shore as a young kid with my dad, and though a common type, I of course still have it and have treasured it all the while. I much more recently dug one in a trash pit way back in a valley, which was a nice surprise. If you're interested to learn more, go to eBay and search "glass fishing float" in title and description and about seven pages will regularly turn up. On one of these pages, you can also find the book "Glass Float" by Walt Pich. It's the newest book on floats, and supposedly incorporates all of the latest found since the original bible on this hobby was published by Amos Wood quite a while ago. I, of course, bought the book off eBay the same day as I bought the floats. Go figure, huh. I feel another sickness coming on.
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Brandon "In Mud We Must"
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